Finding and acquiring customers is very expensive for software vendors, especially when the typically hidden costs of striving to forestall departures and to re-acquire lost relationships are factored into the real accounting equation. Unfortunately, in the competitive pressure of the necessary race to build market share, it is all too easy for a technology company to lose awareness of what comes after the contract has been signed. The result is churn, turnover in the customer community, which can silently drain profitability and cripple the long-term viability of the enterprise.
To help technology companies to regain effective control over post-sale realities and thereby significantly enhance overall profitability and customer retention, Mikael Blaisdell & Associates Inc. offers a range of research and service resources.
Research
The only constant about the high technology industry is rapid change. What technologies are available to companies seeking to more effectively manage their ongoing relationships with their customers? How is the architecture of those relationships changing as the SaaS tsunami continues its progress? What are companies doing about adapting organizational structures to maximize utilization of their people? The first Report of The SaaS & Support Project provided several unique insights into several key aspects of emerging Cloud / SaaS companies, enabling forward-looking management teams to adjust their strategies and structures appropriately. The implications of the changes occurring in the profession and practice of customer support industry-wide are the focus of The Redefinition of Customer Support. And for more than 20 years, Mikael Blaisdell has tracked and analyzed the continuing development of the contact center management technology sector.
Besides The HotLine Magazine, currently read in more than 120 countries and in over a dozen languages, Mikael Blaisdell publishes white papers and other resources and is a frequent speaker at webinars, workshop/seminars and professional conferences.
To become a Member of The HotLine Magazine and gain access to the resources of the Library, please click here.
Services
Successful and effective decision-making relies on a foundation of accurate and up-to-date knowledge. Mikael Blaisdell & Associates have been doing successful assessment projects for all sizes and types of companies all over the world for decades, giving senior management teams access to actionable information and specific recommendations. While the tools and services we apply will depend upon the needs of the particular project, the overall process remains consistent: Assess, Design, and Build. (And while we’re at it, to transfer knowledge, so that the results can be continued.) Typical consulting engagements include company or departmental analyses of various strategic or operational points and organizational re-engineering.
Several types of Advisory relationships are offered to suit a variety of client scenarios. On a more specific level, companies frequently develop needs for senior executive input before reaching a point where hiring a full-time employee is practical or even possible. To assist, we offer tailored “virtual executive” programs that deliver the right level of input for the right price.
More Information
For more information on specific services offered by MB&A, please send email or call to join us for a complimentary Office Hours discussion.
“It’s what you don’t know about your customer relationships that can cause you to lose them.”
–The SaaS Customer Retention QuickStat
Revised: August 19, 2010











Over the past 30 years, cost accounting in software companies has always been a troubling issue. In the turmoil of the startup process, finding the “bandwidth” to do accurate collection and assessment of cost data is understandably difficult. Unfortunately, this lack at the beginning has tended to set a pattern that perpetuates itself. How much are we spending to acquire customers? There is no generally established and accepted methodology for determining customer acquisition costs, nor for how often the process should be done. As a result, few companies can accurately say how much it cost them to acquire a given customer. The effect of fuzzy acquisition cost data is compounded by the near-total lack of any authentic methodology or process for measuring actual retention costs. While there is enough revenue data so that successful companies have a view of their profitability, the lack of a solid cost foundation reduces effective decision-making to “guesstimation” when it comes to retention issues.
The profits-realization strategy of traditional software companies tends to obscure the lack of authentic cost data by the large bursts of profit infusions from new sales. The connection between retention and long-term profitability is given much less emphasis. For SaaS companies, however, the importance of customer retention is sharply increased, and the lack of effective cost accounting methodologies and intervals is a serious threat to long-term corporate viability.
There have been some good articles on the variables to consider in calculating customer acquisition costs for SaaS companies, and on the importance of doing so both regularly and by customer. Joel York’s 
